Blog
-
New Release
gtk4-rs 0.9 and gtk-rs-core 0.20 were just freshly released, just in time for also being included in the GNOME 47 release.
-
New Release
This is the blog post release for gtk4-rs 0.8 and gtk-rs-core 0.19.
-
New Release
It is time again for a new gtk-rs release!
-
New release
It’s now time for a new gtk-rs release!
-
New release
It’s now time for a new Gtk-rs release! As usual, a lot of improvements in a lot of places but subclasses in particular got a lot of updates. Time to dive in on some improvements. Enjoy!
-
New year, new release!
Hi everyone! Happy new year!
-
Here comes the 4
It’s been a long time since the last release, and, as you can guess, a lot of things happened in this span of time. Let’s start with the most important one:
-
New crates, better APIs
Hi everyone, time for a new release!
-
Sponsoring gtk-rs development
Hi everyone!
-
Simplification and more of everything
Hello everyone, time for a new release!
-
New release - more complete, safer
Welcome everyone to this whole new gtk-rs release! Time to check what was added/updated in this new version.
-
Across the line!
Hi everyone!
-
new gtk-rs release!
After being rescheduled a few times, the new gtk-rs is finally here! This time, we focused on adding new types, doing some cleanups and fixing a few things. But the big thing of this release is the add of futures to handle asynchronous function calls! If you’re interested into this, you should take a look at the examples:
-
Who talked about testing?
Hi everyone!
-
New release, gio focused
Hi everyone!
-
New release and always more functionalities (like async!)
Hi everyone!
-
The huge and long awaited release is finally here!
It has been a long time since the last release (4 months already!). We wanted to be sure everything was ready before releasing this one. A lot of new adds, bug fixes and other surprises are there, have fun!
-
New crates, new members
In the last months, a lot of things happened. We know people are expecting the new release, but please be a bit more patient, it’s on its way! Today I wrote this post in order to announce two things:
-
New crates.io versions available and API improvements
TLDR: A lot of minor adds/fixes once again. Few API improvements but the most important ones are:
-
New crates.io versions available
TLDR: A lot of minor adds/fixes once again. Few API improvements but the most important ones are:
-
More versions!
TLDR: A lot of minor adds/fixes. New GNOME libraries versions are now available.
-
Forget everything you knew (gtk 0.0.7)
TLDR: more automation, cargo features are back, more breaking changes than ever, increased linking flexibility.
-
Safety first (gtk 0.0.6)
The latest crates update is about tightening up the safety guarantees.
-
Contributor's story
The previous posts were about the Gtk-rs libraries and issues we encountered. We decided to change the theme a bit by adding posts about Gtk-rs’ most valuable fortune: its contributors. I’ll start myself and tell you my story inside the Gtk-rs organization.
-
Crates meet automation (gtk 0.0.4)
What’s new with the latest batch of crates and the reason for some incompatible changes? More automation.
-
The name is Gtk-rs. Update your git urls!
Our project formerly known as “rgtk” and “rust-gnome”[^name] has adopted the name Gtk-rs and we welcome you at our brand new website!